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spent $0 on marketing and got 10k visitors from reddit by doing the opposite of what everyone teaches

hey indie hackers

every reddit marketing guide tells you the same things:

"post valuable content"

"engage authentically"

"don't self-promote"

i followed all that advice for 2 months

got basically nowhere

then i started doing the OPPOSITE of what the guides say

and everything changed

went from 50 visitors per month to 10k visitors per month

all organic reddit traffic

spent $0 on ads

here's what actually worked (and why the common advice is backwards)

the conventional wisdom that doesn't work

advice 1: "never mention your product in the first post"

every guide says: build trust first, promote later

what i did instead:

mentioned my product in the first sentence

but framed it differently

instead of:

"hey everyone, been lurking here for months, love this community, finally ready to share something i built..."

i wrote:

"analyzed 500 banned reddit posts while building a reddit tool. 73% got banned for the same reason. here's what i found..."

mentioned product immediately (reddit tool)

but as CONTEXT for the value, not the focus

the results:

that post got 200+ upvotes

drove 2,000 visitors

got 8 customers

conventional wisdom says wait weeks before mentioning product

i mentioned it in sentence one and it worked

why this works:

people don't hate product mentions

they hate when product is the ONLY thing you talk about

context makes all the difference

advice 2: "post once and move on"

guides say: don't be repetitive, post different content each time

what i did instead:

found ONE topic that resonated

posted variations of it 20+ times

in different subreddits

with different angles

same core message

the topic: "why founders get banned on reddit"

variations i posted:

"17 shadowbans taught me these rules"

"analyzed 500 banned posts, here's the pattern"

"reddit's karma system explained"

"subreddit rules decoded"

"reddit seo guide"

"how to avoid getting banned"

"reddit posting checklist"

all essentially about the same thing

just different angles and depths

the results:

each variation drove 500-2000 visitors

together: over 10k visitors

why this works:

you're not being repetitive if you're teaching different aspects

each post attracts different people

some want high-level overview

some want deep tactical details

same topic, different depths, different audiences

the conventional advice would have me post:

week 1: reddit marketing

week 2: email marketing

week 3: seo

week 4: content marketing

but that's stupid because:

i only have expertise in ONE of those

why waste time on topics i don't know deeply?

advice 3: "don't post in multiple subreddits"

guides warn: posting same content = spam

what i did instead:

posted in 10-15 subreddits per piece of content

but ADAPTED each version

same core content, different packaging:

r/Entrepreneur version:

title: "17 shadowbans taught me reddit marketing"

angle: entrepreneurial lessons

tone: motivational but practical

r/SaaS version:

title: "Reddit marketing for B2B SaaS: complete guide"

angle: SaaS-specific tactics

tone: metrics and data-focused

r/smallbusiness version:

title: "Free marketing channel: Reddit (how to use it)"

angle: budget-friendly growth

tone: beginner-friendly

the results:

10-15 subreddit posts per content piece

3-4 would get traction

1-2 would really blow up

total reach: 5x-10x a single post

why this works:

different communities need different framing

same information, different contexts

NOT duplicate content if properly adapted

the key:

don't just copy-paste

change title, intro, examples, tone

takes 15 minutes per adaptation

worth it for 10x reach

advice 4: "build karma slowly and organically"

guides say: spend months commenting, building reputation

what i did instead:

built 500 karma in 3 weeks

with a systematic approach

not by "being authentic and helpful over time"

the system:

week 1: r/AskReddit rising posts

30 minutes per day

sort by rising (not hot, not new)

answer 5-7 questions per day

thoughtful 2-3 paragraph answers

result: 150 karma in 7 days

week 2: add niche subreddits

continued r/AskReddit (20 min)

added hobby subreddits (20 min)

helped people with genuine questions

result: 200 more karma

total: 350

week 3: strategic business subreddit comments

continued above (30 min)

added early comments in small business subs (15 min)

result: 180 more karma

total: 530

total time invested: 16 hours over 3 weeks

why this works:

guides make it sound like karma takes months

it doesn't if you're systematic

rising posts in r/AskReddit is a cheat code

one good answer = 100+ karma

advice 5: "never ask for upvotes or engagement"

guides say: let content speak for itself

what i did instead:

explicitly asked for specific engagement

just not in the way you think

instead of:

"please upvote if you found this helpful"

(against reddit rules, gets you banned)

i wrote:

"what's been your biggest reddit challenge? getting banned? low karma? confusing rules?"

"drop your worst banned reddit post below and i'll tell you exactly why it failed"

"which of these 3 strategies would you try first?"

not asking for upvotes

asking for COMMENTS

why this matters:

early comments trigger reddit's algorithm

more comments = more visibility

more visibility = more upvotes

indirect way to boost engagement

the results:

posts with specific questions: 40-60 comments

posts without questions: 5-10 comments

comments boost visibility dramatically

advice 6: "post at optimal times"

guides say: 8-10am EST for maximum visibility

what i did instead:

tested posting times systematically

found the guides are WRONG for most subreddits

my data from 50+ posts:

r/Entrepreneur:

best time: 6-7am EST (before everyone wakes up)

worst time: 8-10am EST (too saturated)

r/SaaS:

best time: tuesday 2-4pm EST

worst time: monday mornings

r/SideProject:

best time: saturday 9-11am EST

worst time: weekday afternoons

why the conventional advice fails:

they're averaging across all of reddit

but each subreddit has different active hours

different demographics

different posting patterns

what actually works:

test 5-10 different times in your target subreddit

track which ones get early engagement

double down on what works for THAT community

advice 7: "write long, comprehensive posts"

guides say: longer = better, more value

what i did instead:

tested different lengths systematically

results:

300-500 words: average 15 upvotes

too short, feels low-effort

800-1200 words: average 87 upvotes

sweet spot for most subreddits

detailed but scannable

1500-2000 words: average 134 upvotes

best for educational content

comprehensive guides

2500+ words: average 41 upvotes

too long, people don't finish

engagement drops

the insight:

longer isn't always better

depends on subreddit and topic

r/Entrepreneur: wants 1500+ words

r/SideProject: prefers 800-1000 words

test and adapt

advice 8: "use reddit as a long-term strategy"

guides say: takes 6-12 months to see results

what i did instead:

got results in week 1

by focusing on quick wins

week 1 strategy:

didn't wait to build karma slowly

used r/AskReddit to get 100 karma in 5 days

posted immediately in target subreddits

week 1 results:

first post in r/Entrepreneur: 87 upvotes, 400 visitors

second post in r/SaaS: 34 upvotes, 150 visitors

third post in r/SideProject: 156 upvotes, 800 visitors

total week 1: 1,350 visitors

why this works:

you don't need to wait months

you need to understand the system

karma can be built in weeks

good content works immediately

the actual system i used

here's the complete framework:

phase 1: rapid karma building (week 1-2)

goal: get to 100 karma

daily routine:

30 minutes in r/AskReddit

sort by rising

answer 5 thoughtful questions

parallel: join target subreddits

lurk and learn culture

don't post yet

phase 2: first content push (week 3)

goal: validate your content works

action:

write one comprehensive guide

topic you know deeply

1200-1500 words

adapt for 3 subreddits:

different titles

different intros

different examples

post all 3 in same day:

morning, afternoon, evening

different subreddits

track which performs best

phase 3: double down (week 4-6)

goal: scale what works

action:

found which subreddit/format worked?

create 3 more variations on that topic

post in same subreddit + similar ones

tracking:

which angles get most upvotes?

which drive most traffic?

which convert to customers?

phase 4: content engine (week 7+)

goal: consistent traffic

routine:

2-3 comprehensive posts per week

each adapted for 3-5 subreddits

= 6-15 subreddit posts per week

plus:

commenting 20-30 min per day

responding to all comments on your posts

building reputation

the metrics that actually mattered

metric 1: upvotes in first hour

if you don't get 5+ upvotes in first 60 minutes

post is dead

algorithm buries it

how to influence:

post at tested optimal time

engage in comments immediately

ask specific questions to drive comments

metric 2: comment-to-upvote ratio

healthy ratio: 1 comment per 5-10 upvotes

if you have 100 upvotes and 2 comments

post isn't engaging people

if you have 20 upvotes and 40 comments

extremely engaged audience

how to influence:

ask specific questions

respond to every comment

create discussion prompts

metric 3: traffic-to-upvote ratio

i tracked how many visitors per upvote

my averages:

r/Entrepreneur: 8-12 visitors per upvote

r/SaaS: 6-9 visitors per upvote

r/SideProject: 4-7 visitors per upvote

example:

100 upvotes in r/Entrepreneur = 800-1200 visitors

helps predict traffic from upvotes

what actually drove the 10k visitors

breakdown by post type:

comprehensive guides (5 posts):

total upvotes: 847

total visitors: 6,200

average: 1,240 visitors per post

case studies with data (3 posts):

total upvotes: 312

total visitors: 2,100

average: 700 visitors per post

problem-solution posts (4 posts):

total upvotes: 198

total visitors: 1,400

average: 350 visitors per post

quick tips (3 posts):

total upvotes: 89

total visitors: 300

average: 100 visitors per post

the lesson:

comprehensive guides 10x better than quick tips

takes 3x longer to write

gets 10x results

worth the investment

the subreddit distribution

where the 10k visitors came from:

r/Entrepreneur: 4,200 visitors (42%)

r/SaaS: 2,100 visitors (21%)

r/SideProject: 1,800 visitors (18%)

r/smallbusiness: 900 visitors (9%)

others: 1,000 visitors (10%)

the insight:

80% of traffic came from 3 subreddits

don't spread yourself too thin

master 3-4 key communities

conversion data (the part that matters)

traffic is cool but does it convert?

10k visitors resulted in:

email signups: 340 (3.4% conversion)

trial starts: 89 (0.89% conversion)

paid customers: 23 (0.23% conversion)

is that good?

for free organic traffic, yes

reddit traffic is skeptical but high-quality

when they convert, they actually use the product

what i'd do differently

mistake 1: waited too long to post

spent first 2 weeks just commenting

should've started posting in week 1

mistake 2: tried too many subreddits

posted in 25+ different communities

should've focused on top 5

mistake 3: didn't repurpose enough

wrote new content each time

should've adapted successful posts more

mistake 4: ignored comment sections

early on, posted and left

should've stayed in comments for first 2-3 hours

the controversial take

most reddit marketing advice is written by:

people who tried reddit once and failed

marketers who don't actually use reddit

agencies selling reddit marketing services

it's not written by people who've actually succeeded on reddit

the conventional advice optimizes for:

not getting banned

being safe

following all the rules

my approach optimizes for:

actually getting results

testing boundaries

figuring out what works

the difference:

conventional approach: post once per month, get 20 upvotes

my approach: post 3x per week, adapt constantly, get results

how i built this into redchecker

learned all this while building and promoting redchecker

now these insights are features:

posting time optimizer:

shows best times for each subreddit

based on engagement data

not generic "8-10am" advice

content length analyzer:

recommends optimal length

based on target subreddit

historical performance data

adaptation assistant:

takes one post

suggests how to adapt for different subreddits

changes title, intro, examples

performance predictor:

estimates upvotes and traffic

based on your content

and target subreddit

your action plan

if you want to replicate this:

week 1:

build 100 karma using r/AskReddit strategy

join and lurk in 5 target subreddits

week 2:

continue karma building

analyze top posts in target subreddits

write first comprehensive guide

week 3:

adapt guide for 3 subreddits

post all 3

track results

week 4:

double down on what worked

create 2 more posts in that format

adapt for 3-5 subreddits each

week 5-8:

maintain 2-3 posts per week

each adapted for multiple communities

respond to all comments

build reputation

questions for you

1. what's stopping you from posting on reddit?

fear of getting banned?

don't know what to write?

tried and failed?

2. would you try this approach?

posting frequently and adapting

vs posting rarely and hoping

3. what topic could you write 10 variations on?

what do you know deeply enough?

final offer

if you want help implementing this:

redchecker.io has all these features now

optimal posting times per subreddit

content adaptation suggestions

performance tracking

ban risk detection

lifetime deal: $59 (ending soon)

monthly: code "IN26" for 50% off

the truth

conventional reddit advice keeps you safe

but safe doesn't get results

you have to test boundaries

find what actually works

not what the guides say should work

i got 10k visitors by doing the opposite

not because i'm smarter

but because i tested instead of following

test your own approach

track what works

do more of that

ignore the conventional wisdom

-musha

posted to Icon for redchecker.io
redchecker.io
  1. 1

    The velocity metric is the most actionable insight here. I've noticed the same thing with content across platforms — it's not total engagement that matters, it's how fast the first wave hits. Reddit's 30-minute window is ruthless.

    Your conversion numbers are honest and that's refreshing. 0.23% visitor-to-paid is low in absolute terms but the quality signal matters more — those 23 customers found you through genuine problem-solving, not ads. That usually means way lower churn and higher LTV.

    One thing I'd push back on: the "ignore conventional wisdom" framing. What you're actually describing IS best practice, just with actual data behind it instead of generic advice. Testing posting times per subreddit, adapting content per community, focusing on 3-4 subs — that's not "opposite" of good advice, it's the data-driven version of it.

  2. 1

    This resonates a lot.

    Most Reddit advice ignores patterns and focuses on generic rules.

    What changed things for me was realizing that mods don’t judge single posts —

    they judge behavior across time.

    Curious: was the biggest unlock changing where/when you posted,

    or how often similar content appeared across subs?